Full of high feeding, madly hath broke loose, Bard. Noble earl, I bring you certain news from Shrewsbury. BARD. As good as heart can wish:The king is almost wounded to the death; And, in the fortune of my lord your son, Prince Harry slain outright; and both the Blunts Kill'd by the hand of Douglas: young prince John, And Westmoreland and Stafford, fled the field; And Harry Monmouth's brawn, the hulk Sir John, Is prisoner to your son: O, such a day, So fought, so follow'd, and so fairly won, Came not, till now, to dignify the times, Since Cæsar's fortunes! NORTH. How is this deriv'd? Saw you the field? came you from Shrewsbury? BARD. I spake with one, my lord, that came from thence; A gentleman well bred, and of good name, On Tuesday last to listen after news. BARD. My lord, I over-rode him on the way; And he is furnish'd with no certainties, More than he haply may retail from me. Enter TRAVers. NORTH. NOW, Travers, what good tidings come with you? TRA. My lord, sir John Umfrevile turn'd me back With joyful tidings; and, being better hors'd, Out-rode me. After him, came spurring hard, A gentleman almost forspent with speed?, That stopp'd by me to breathe his bloodied horse: I did demand, what news from Shrewsbury. 2 And that young Harry Percy's spur was cold: 9 66 FORSPENT with speed,] To forspend is to waste, to exhaust. So, in Sir A. Gorges' translation of Lucan, b. vii. : crabbed sires forspent with age." STEEVENS. ARMED heels —] Thus the quarto 1600. The folio, 1623, reads "able heels ; the modern editors, without authority-" agile heels." STEEVENS. 2-poor jade-] Poor jade is used, not in contempt, but in compassion. Poor jade means the horse wearied with his journey. Jade, however, seems anciently to have signified what we now call a hackney; a beast employed in drudgery, opposed to a horse kept for show, or to be rid by its master. So, in a comedy called A Knack to know a Knave, 1594: "Besides, I'll give you the keeping of a dozen jades, "And now and then meat for you and your horse." This is said by a farmer to a courtier. STEEVENS. Shakspeare, however, (as Mr. Steevens has observed,) certainly does not use the word as a term of contempt; for King Richard the Second gives this appellation to his favourite horse Roan Barbary, on which Henry the Fourth rode at his coronation : 3 "That jade hath eat bread from my royal hand.” MALONE. rowel-head;] I think that I have observed in old prints the rowel of those times to have been only a single spike. JOHNSON. Dr. Johnson had either forgotten the precise meaning of the word rowel, or has made choice of inaccurate language in applying it to the single spiked spur, which he had seen in old prints. The former signifies the moveable spiked wheel at the end of a spur, such as was actually used in the time of Henry the Fourth, and long before the other was laid aside. Shakspeare certainly meant the spur of his own time. Douce. NORTH. 5 Ha!Again. Said he, young Harry Percy's spur was cold? BARD. My lord, I'll tell you what If my young lord your son have not the day, Upon mine honour, for a silken point I'll give my barony: never talk of it. 6 NORTH. Why should that gentleman, that rode by Travers, Give then such instances of loss? BARD. Spoke at a venture. Look, here comes more news. 4 He seem'd in running to devour the way,] So, in the book of Job, chap. xxxix: “He swalloweth the ground in fierceness and rage." The same expression occurs in Ben Jonson's Sejanus : "But with that speed and heat of appetite, "With which they greedily devour the way "To some great sports." STEEVENS. So Ariel, to describe his alacrity in obeying Prospero's commands: "I drink the air before me." M. MASON. So, in one of the Roman poets (I forget which): cursu consumere campum. BLACKSTONE. The line quoted by Sir William Blackstone is in Nemesian : latumque fuga consumere campum. MALONE. 5 Of HOTSPUR, coldspur?] Hotspur seems to have been a very common term for a man of vehemence and precipitation. Stanyhurst, who translated four books of Virgil, in 1584, renders the following line: Nec victoris heri tetigit captiva cubile. "To couch not mounting of mayster vanquisher hoatspur." STEEVENS. 6 silken POINT-] A point is a string tagged, or lace. JOHNSON. 7 some HILDING fellow,] For hilderling, i. e. base, degenerate. РОРЕ. Hilderling, Degener; vox adhuc agro Devon. familiaris. Spel REED. man. Enter MORTON. NORTH. Yea, this man's brow, like to a titleleaf8 Foretells the nature of a tragick volume: So looks the strond, whereon* the imperious flood Say, Morton, didst thou come from Shrewsbury? NORTH. * Folio, when. 8 like to a title-leaf,] It may not be amiss to observe, that, in the time of our poet, the title-page to an elegy, as well as every intermediate leaf, was totally black. I have several in my possession, written by Chapman, the translator of Homer, and ornamented in this manner. STEEVENS. 9 I a witness'd usurpation.] i. e. an attestation of its ravage. STEEVENS. so woe-begone,] This word was common enough amongst the old Scottish and English poets, as G. Douglas, Chaucer, Lord Buckhurst, Fairfax; and signifies, far gone So, in The Spanish Tragedy: in woe. WARBURTON. Awake, revenge, or we are wo-begone!" Again, in Arden of Feversham, 1592: "So woe-begone, so inly charg'd with woe." Again, in A Looking Glass for London and England, 1598: "Fair Alvida, look not so woe-begone." Dr. Bentley is said to have thought this passage corrupt, and therefore (with a greater degree of gravity than my readers will probably express) proposed the following emendation: "So dead, so dull in look, Ucalegon, "Drew Priam's curtain," &c. The name of Ucalegon is found in the third book of the Iliad, and the second of the Æneid. STEEVENS. And would have told him, half his Troy was burn'd: But Priam found the fire, ere he his tongue, And I my Percy's death; ere thou report'st it. Your brother, thus; so fought the noble Douglas; NORTH. Why, he is dead. See, what a ready tongue suspicion hath! He, that but fears the thing he would not know, 2 And make thee rich for doing me such wrong. upon your mind, by which JOHNSON. 2 Your spirit-] The impression you conceive the death of your son. 3 Yet, for all this, say not, &c.] The contradiction, in the first part of this speech, might be imputed to the distraction of Northumberland's mind; but the calmness of the reflection, contained in the last lines, seems not much to countenance such a supposition. I will venture to distribute this passage in a manner which will, I hope, seem more commodious; but do not wish the reader to forget, that the most commodious is not always the true reading : "Bard. Yet, for all this, say not that Percy's dead."" "North. I see a strange confession in thine eye, "Thou shak'st thy head, and hold'st it fear, or sin, "To speak a truth. If he be slain, say so: “The tongue offends not, that reports his death; |